Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-18T17:47:15.391Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Clay Mineralogy, Oxygen Isotope Geochemistry, and Water/Rock Ratio Estimates, Te Mihi Area, Wairakei Geothermal Field, New Zealand

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Ryan B. Libbey*
Affiliation:
The University of Western Ontario, Department of Earth Sciences, Biology and Geological Sciences Bldg., London, Ontario, Canada, N6A 5B7
Fred J. Longstaffe
Affiliation:
The University of Western Ontario, Department of Earth Sciences, Biology and Geological Sciences Bldg., London, Ontario, Canada, N6A 5B7
Roberta L. Flemming
Affiliation:
The University of Western Ontario, Department of Earth Sciences, Biology and Geological Sciences Bldg., London, Ontario, Canada, N6A 5B7
*
Present address: McGill University, Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences, Frank Dawson Adams Bldg., 3450 University Street, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3A 2A7
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Dioctahedral clays from an active continental geothermal system have been studied to assess their usefulness as proxies of paleo-hydrological and thermal conditions in the subsurface. Drill cuttings from Well WK244 in the Te Mihi area of the Wairakei Geothermal Field, New Zealand, were analyzed to determine the mineralogical, morphological, and isotopic characteristics of hydrothermal clays in these samples. Mixed-layer illite-dioctahedral smectite (I-S) and R0 chlorite-trioctahedral smectite are the main clay minerals, with I-S clays varying downward from R1 to R3 ordering and 50 to >90% illite over 160 m. The proportion of illite in I-S correlates positively with downhole temperature (r = 0.98) and I-S morphology changes from high aspect ratio ribbons, laths, and hairy fibers to pseudo-hexagonal plates with depth. Swelling clay percentages determined using the methylene blue method show a strong positive correlation with %S in I-S (r = 0.91), validating use of methylene blue as a rapid field tool for characterizing the smectite to illite transition in this active geothermal environment. The oxygen isotopic composition of I-S (dd18OI-S) decreases systematically with depth, and mostly reflects a progressive increase in subsurface temperature during clay formation. Estimates of water/rock ratios calculated using δ18OI-S values display stratigraphic variability that corresponds to variations in permeability. Oxygen isotopic measurements of I-S are a useful tool for understanding reservoir and permeability evolution in such geothermal systems and their related fossil analogs.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Clay Minerals Society 2013

References

Altaner, S.P. and Ylagan, R.F., 1997 Comparison of structural models of mixed-layer illite/smectite and reaction mechanisms of smectite illitization Clays and Clay Minerals 45 517533.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ayalon, A. and Longstaffe, F.J., 1990 Isolation of diagenetic silicate minerals in clastic sedimentary rocks for oxygen isotope analysis — a summary of methods Israel Journal of Earth Sciences 39 139148.Google Scholar
Banwell, C.J., Tongiorgi, E., 1963 Oxygen and hydrogen isotopes in New Zealand thermal areas Nuclear Geology in Geothermal Areas Pisa, Italy Consiglio Nationale delle Ricerche 95138.Google Scholar
Bauer, A. Velde, B. and Gaupp, R., 2000 Experimental constraints on illite crystal morphology Clay Minerals 35 587597.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bechtel, A. and Hoernes, S., 1990 Oxygen isotope fractionation between oxygen of different sites in illite minerals — a potential single-mineral thermometer Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 104 463470.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bixley, P.F. Clotworthy, A.W. and Mannington, W.I., 2009 Evolution of the Wairakei geothermal reservoir during 50 years of production Geothermics 38 145154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Borthwick, J. and Harmon, R.S., 1982 A note regarding ClF3 as an alternative to BrF5 for oxygen isotope analysis Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 46 16651668.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Braithwaite, R.L., 2003 Geological and mineralogical characterization of zeolites in lacustrine tuffs, Ngakuru, Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand Clays and Clay Minerals 51 589598.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Browne, P.R.L. and Ellis, A.J., 1970 Ohaki-Broadlands hydrothermal area, New Zealand — mineralogy and related geochemistry American Journal of Science 269 97131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clayton, R.N. and Mayeda, T.K., 1963 The use of bromine pentafluoride in the extraction of oxygen from oxides and silicates for isotopic analysis Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 27 4352.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clayton, R.N. and Steiner, A., 1975 Oxygen isotope studies of the geothermal system at Wairakei, New Zealand Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 39 11791186.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Champion, D., 1989 Etude des mécanismes de transformation des interstratifiés illite/smectite au cours de la diagenèse PhD thesis France Université de Paris XI-Orsay 204 pp..Google Scholar
Chi, M.A. and Browne, P.R.L., 1991 Alteration mineralogy of sediments in the Huka Falls Formation of the Te Mihi area, Wairakei Proceedings of the 13th New Zealand Geothermal Workshop 185191.Google Scholar
Christidis, G.E., 1998 Comparative study of the mobility of major and trace elements during alteration of an andesite and a rhyolite to bentonite, in the islands of Milos and Kimolos, Aegean, Greece Clays and Clay Minerals 46 379399.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cole, J.W., 1990 Structural control and origin of volcanism in the Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand Bulletin of Volcanology 52 445459.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eslinger, E.V. and Savin, S.M., 1973 Mineralogy and oxygen isotope geochemistry of hydrothermally altered rocks of Ohaki-Broadlands, New Zealand geothermal areas American Journal of Science 273 240267.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flemming, R.L., 2007 Micro x-ray diffraction (mXRD): a versatile technique for characterization of Earth and planetary materials Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 44 13331346.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giggenbach, W.F., 1995 Variations in the chemical and isotopic composition of fluids discharged from the Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 68 89116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guven, N., 2001 Mica structure and fibrous growth of illite Clays and Clay Minerals 49 189196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haas, J.L., 1971 Effect of salinity on maximum thermal gradient of a hydrothermal system at hydrostatic pressure Economic Geology 66 940946.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harrison, A. and White, R.S., 2006 Lithospheric structure of an active backarc basin: the Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand Geophysical Journal International 167 968990.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harvey, C. and Browne, P.R.L., 1991 Mixed-layer clay geothermometry in the Wairakei geothermal field, New Zealand Clays and Clay Minerals 39 614621.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harvey, C. and Browne, P., 2000 Studies of mixed-layer clays in geothermal systems and their effectiveness as mineral geothermometers Proceedings of the World Geothermal Congress 12011205.Google Scholar
Harvey, C. Gunderson, R. and Cumming, W., 2000 Methylene Blue adsorption: a real-time rig geologist tool for estimating geothermal reservoir temperatures and forecasting drillhole stability problems Proceedings of the 22nd New Zealand Geothermal Workshop 151155.Google Scholar
Henley, R.W. and Ellis, A.J., 1983 Geothermal systems ancient and modern - a geochemical review Earth-Science Reviews 19 150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hower, J. Eslinger, E.V. Hower, M.E. and Perry, E.A., 1976 Mechanism of burial metamorphism of argillaceous sediment: 1. Mineralogical and chemical evidence Geological Society of America Bulletin 87 725737.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inoue, A. and Kitagawa, R., 1994 Morphological characteristics of illitic clay minerals from a hydrothermal system American Mineralogist 79 700711.Google Scholar
Inoue, A. Meunier, A. and Beaufort, D., 2004 Illite-smectite mixed-layer minerals in felsic volcaniclastic rocks from drill cores, Kakkonda, Japan Clays and Clay Minerals 52 6684.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inoue, A. Lanson, B. Marques-Fernandes, M. Sakharov, B.A. Murakami, T. Meunier, A. and Beaufort, D., 2005 Illite-smectite mixed-layer minerals in the hydrothermal alteration of volcanic rocks: I. One-dimensional XRD structure analysis and characterization of component layers Clays and Clay Minerals 53 423439.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, M.L., 1969 Soil Chemical Analysis, Advanced Course 2nd edition Wisconsin, USA Published by the author, Madison.Google Scholar
James, A.T. and Baker, D.R., 1976 Oxygen isotope-exchange between illite and water at 22 degrees C Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 40 235239.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keller, W.D. Reynolds, R.C. and Inoue, A., 1986 Morphology of clay minerals in the smectite-to-illite conversion series by scanning electron microscopy Clays and Clay Minerals 34 187197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kissling, W.M. Brown, K.L. O’Sullivan, M.J. White, S.P. and Bullivant, D.P., 1996 Modelling chloride and CO2 chemistry in the Wairakei geothermal reservoir Geothermics 25 285305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lanson, B. and Champion, D., 1991 The I/S-to-illite reaction in the late stage diagenesis American Journal of Science 291 473506.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Larson, P.B. and Taylor, H.P., 1986 An oxygen isotope study of hydrothermal alteration in the Lake-City Caldera, San-Juan Mountains, Colorado Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 30 4782.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Longstaffe, F.J., 1986 Oxygen isotope studies of diagenesis in the basal Belly River sandstone, Pembina I-Pool, Alberta Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 56 7888.Google Scholar
Longstaffe, F.J. and Ayalon, A., 1991 Mineralogical and O-isotope studies of diagenesis and porewater evolution in continental sandstones, Cretaceous Belly River Group, Alberta, Canada Applied Geochemistry 6 291303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meunier, A., 2005 Clays Berlin, Heidelberg Springer-Verlag 472 pp..Google Scholar
Moore, D. Reynolds, R.C. Jr., 1997 X-ray diffraction and the Identification and Analysis of Clay Minerals 2nd edition New York Oxford University Press 396 pp.Google Scholar
Muramatsu, Y. Komatsu, R. Sawaki, T. Sasaki, M. and Yanagiya, S., 2000 Geochemical study of fluid inclusions in anhydrite from the Kakkonda geothermal system, Northeast Japan Geochemical Journal 34 175193.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nadeau, P.H. and Reynolds, R.C., 1981 Burial and contact-metamorphism in the Mancos Shale Clays and Clay Minerals 29 249259.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reynolds, R.C. Jr., 1985 NEWMOD: A computer program for the calculation of one-dimensional diffraction patterns of mixed-layered clays Hanover, New Hampshire, USA R.C. Reynolds, 8 Brook Rd..Google Scholar
Rosenberg, M.D. Bignall, G. and Rae, A.J., 2009 The geological framework of the Wairakei-Tauhara geothermal system, New Zealand Geothermics 38 7284.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ryan, P.C. Conrad, M.E. Brown, K. Chamberlain, C.P. and Reynolds, R.C., 1998 Oxygen isotope compositions of mixed-layer serpentine-chlorite and illite-smectite in the Tuscaloosa Formation (U.S. Gulf Coast): implications for pore fluids and mineralogic reactions Clays and Clay Minerals 46 357368.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Savin, S.M. and Epstein, S., 1970 Oxygen and hydrogen isotope geochemistry of clay minerals Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 34 2542.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Savin, S.M. and Lee, M., 1988 Isotopic studies of phyllosilicates Hydrophyllosilicates (Exclusive of the Micas) 19 189223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steiner, A. (1977) The Wairakei geothermal area, North Island, New Zealand: its subsurface geology and hydrothermal rock alteration. New Zealand Geological Survey, Bulletin, 90.Google Scholar
Stewart, M.K., 1978 Stable isotopes in waters from the Wairakei geothermal area, New Zealand. Stable Isotopes in the Earth Sciences New Zealand Department of Scientific and Industrial Research Bulletin 220 113120.Google Scholar
Stratford, W.R. and Stern, T.A., 2006 Crust and upper mantle structure of a continental backarc: central North Island, New Zealand Geophysical Journal International 166 469484.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Surdam, R.C. Crossey, L.J. and Lahann, R., 1984 Mineral oxidants and porosity enhancement American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin 68 532532.Google Scholar
Taylor, H.P. Jr., 1977 Water/rock interactions ad the origin of H2O in granitic batholiths Journal of the Geological Society of London 133 509558.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vitali, F. Longstaffe, F.J. McCarthy, P.J. Plint, A.G. and Caldwell, W.G.E., 2002 Stable isotopic investigation of clay minerals and pedogenesis in an interfluve paleosol from the Cenomanian Dunvegan formation, NE British Columbia, Canada Chemical Geology 192 269287.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, A.F. Chuma, N.J. and Goff, F., 1992 Mass-transfer constraints on the chemical evolution of an active hydrothermal system, Valles Caldera, New Mexico Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 49 233253.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitney, G., 1990 Role of water in the smectite-to-illite reaction Clays and Clay Minerals 38 343350.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yeh, H.W. and Eslinger, E.V., 1986 Oxygen isotopes and the extent of diagenesis of clay minerals during sedimentation and burial in the sea Clays and Clay Minerals 34 403406.CrossRefGoogle Scholar